AMISH FIGHTING FOR RELEASE

CINCINNATI 
Attorneys for a group of Amish men and women found guilty of hate crimes for cutting the hair and beards of fellow members of their faith in eastern Ohio are arguing that the group’s conviction, sentencing and imprisonment in separate facilities across the country violates their constitutional rights and amounts to cruel and unusual punishment, according to recent court filings.

The filings in federal court in Akron seek the release of seven of 16 Amish convicted in September in the 2011 attacks that were meant to shame fellow Amish they believed were straying from strict religious interpretations.

Although six of the requests were denied by the trial judge, one is still pending, and the judge could at any time order any of them released as they await the outcome of their appeals, expected to be filed this summer.

Associated Press

Defense attorneys may also appeal denials of the release requests to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati.

The Amish group’s leader, Samuel Mullet Sr., was sentenced to 15 years in prison, while the rest of the group got sentences ranging from one to seven years.

The Amish have been sent to different prisons across the country, placing an overly harsh burden on their families who — because of their religion — cannot travel by plane and have to hire drivers for car travel, the group’s attorneys argue.

For instance, in order for Mullet’s wife to visit him and three sons convicted in the case, she’d have to travel to Oklahoma, Louisiana and two different prisons 160 miles apart in Minnesota.

The Amish “are being treated much more harshly than the typical federal prisoner, including those with much worse criminal histories and offense conduct,” Mullet’s attorney, Edward Bryan, wrote in a March 29 filing. “The manner in which their sentences are being carried out by the Bureau of Prisons is cruel and unusual.”

Michael Tobin, a spokesman with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Ohio, declined to make prosecutors in the case available for comment and declined to talk about the filings except to say: “We’ll respond to them in our response filed with the court.”

Other arguments in the filings from the defense are far broader, largely uncharted territory in the courts and could eventually land in the U.S. Supreme Court, according to attorneys in the case and constitutional law professors contacted by The Associated Press.

Defense attorneys for the Amish are attacking the group’s prosecution under the federal hate crime statute, passed in 2009. The statute stipulates that to constitute a federal violation, the crime has to involve crossing state lines or using “an instrumentality of interstate or foreign commerce.”

In this case, government prosecutors successfully argued that the scissors and hair clippers were an instrumentality of interstate commerce.

That argument is an abuse of federal power and is unconstitutional, the defense attorneys argue.

Bryan pointed to last year’s landmark decision by the U.S. Supreme Court over President Barack Obama’s federal health care law. The court found that the individual insurance mandate at the heart of the law was not enforceable under Congress’ power over interstate commerce but rather as a tax.